Stirling Observer

Craik rink become world champions

Stunning final victory for Peak-based curlers

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British Curling’s golden season ended in appropriat­e fashion in Jonkoping, Sweden when Team Craik became world junior champions with an emphatic 7-1 victory over Germany in the final.

The Peak-based rink of James Craik, Angus Bryce, Scott Hyslop and Niall Ryder had been the strongest team throughout the event and demonstrat­ed their superiorit­y from the outset in the decider as they produced a relentless performanc­e in overcoming Benny Kapp’s men.

What made the win all the more impressive was the mature way in which they responded to an early setback when skip Craik’s first delivery of the match was sent off course by a pick, preventing him from setting up a chance for a two at the opening end.

Faced instead with three counting German stones as he threw his final stone, he calmly took out the closest of them to get his team on the scoreboard. After a blanked second end, they then took the initiative at the third end when Craik’s take out with his final stone this time left Kapp facing three opposing shots and he was slightly heavy, Bryce sweeping his stone the vital last few millimetre­s past the tee line to turn it into a steal of two as the Scots moved 3-0 ahead.

They were never really challenged from then on, running out 7-1 winners.

After the game, Craik explained how they had turned adversity to advantage on their way to victory.

“The pick could have been a turning point at the start of the game,” Craik admitted.

“To not have a range finder and for your first stone of the world final to pick and be nowhere near wasn’t great, but we kept composed and I just trusted my own throw and managed to make that nose hit against three.

“So as much as it hurt with the pick, to make that shot really filled me with confidence and settled any nerves that I had.”

However, what pleased him most was the sustained quality of their play when it mattered most.

On a personal level it was the culminatio­n of four years’ hard work, having been part of Ross Whyte’s team that had claimed bronze at the 2019 event.

In 2020 Craik, along with Bryce and Ryder on that occasion, won another bronze, while this was a first medal for Hyslop and for alternate Jack Carrick and the skip said he had drawn inspiratio­n from the men they work alongside at the National Curling Academy in Stirling, this season’s European champions, Olympic finalists and Pinty’s Grand Slam Cup winners Team Mouat.

“It’s something I’ve thought about ever since I’ve started curling,” he said. “I’ve watched people win it, the likes of

Bruce Mouat when he won gold and it was such a turning point in his career. He’s just gone on from there. “

He went on: “To equal his achievemen­t at World Juniors and to be able to call myself a world champion is just crazy for me.”

He also expressed gratitude to those who have backed them in the pursuit of their ambitions.

“The team and the support staff, our coaches and all the supporters that came made this for us, we couldn’t have done it without them,” said Craik.

“We’re so happy and, as much as I’m proud of our team being world champions, I’m really proud to be the team that’s made Scotland world champions. For me that’s just really, really special.”

As Team Craik set their sights on following Team Mouat’s success at the highest level of the sport, the opportunit­y is available to promising curlers to follow in the footsteps of the new World Junior champions by joining British Curling’s Performanc­e Foundation Programme at The PEAK in Stirling.

Applicatio­ns for places on that programme in the 2022/23 season opened this weekend and details can be found on the British Curling website - https://www.britishcur­ling.org.uk/ news/british-curling-performanc­efoundatio­n-programme-applicatio­nsopen-for-2022-23.

 ?? ?? Success Team Craik celebrate their victory over Germany
Success Team Craik celebrate their victory over Germany

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